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2.09 MB

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Type: Scientific proposal / white paper (page 2)
File Size: 2.09 MB
Summary

This document is page 2 of a scientific proposal or white paper discussing the need for a new interdisciplinary scientific discipline focused on 'mental representations.' It argues for integrating linguistics, cognitive psychology, and neuroscience within the framework of constructionist Artificial Intelligence. The text outlines emerging paradigms such as 'Integrated architectures of cognition,' 'Universal representations,' and 'Perceptual grounding.' The document bears the Bates stamp HOUSE_OVERSIGHT_027005, indicating it is part of a congressional investigation.

Organizations (5)

Name Type Context
Artificial General Intelligence (AGI)
Mentioned as an example of initiatives springing up within AI.
Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures (BICA)
Mentioned as an example of initiatives springing up within AI.
Cognitive Systems
Mentioned as an example of initiatives springing up within AI.
Cognitive Modeling (ICCM)
Mentioned as an example of initiatives springing up within AI.
House Oversight Committee
Implied by Bates stamp 'HOUSE_OVERSIGHT'.

Key Quotes (3)

"The study of mental representations requires a new scientific discipline"
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Quote #1
"Mental representations lie outside the domain of neuroscience, which mostly focuses on material descriptions of the function of the underlying substrate."
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Quote #2
"Despite the lack of a common methodological ground between the cognitive sciences, we can now observe a growing consensus on how to approach the problem of modeling the mind, and its representational apparatus."
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Quote #3

Full Extracted Text

Complete text extracted from the document (2,933 characters)

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The study of mental representations requires a new scientific discipline
Unraveling mental representations will be an interdisciplinary effort among several cognitive sciences, but distinct from the disciplines that we find now:
The project will differ from linguistics, for instance, in similar way as geography differs from plate tectonics. Where linguists study the intrinsic ‘geography’ of languages, and the structural commonalities among them, mental representations uncover the underlying dynamics that produce natural languages (as the solutions to the problem of translating between hierarchical, distributed, associative, ambiguous representations and the discrete strings of symbols that we use as a means of exchanging and organizing ideas).
Integrating concepts from linguistics, cognitive psychology and neuroscience within the methodological framework of constructionist Artificial Intelligence
Mental representations lie outside the domain of neuroscience, which mostly focuses on material descriptions of the function of the underlying substrate. They cannot be studied well within contemporary psychology, which favors an experimentalist, quantitative approach, where we need to address qualitative questions by constructing working, implementable systems. And needless to say, the study of mental representations is currently not well represented in Artificial Intelligence research, which does provide a productive methodology, but has mostly turned towards applications and narrow AI solutions.
A new common ground between AI and cognitive science researchers
Despite the lack of a common methodological ground between the cognitive sciences, we can now observe a growing consensus on how to approach the problem of modeling the mind, and its representational apparatus. During the last decade, a number of initiatives have sprung up within AI, psychology and cognitive science, each with journals, workshops and conference series, and a large personal overlap among each community. Examples include Artificial General Intelligence (AGI), Biologically Inspired Cognitive Architectures (BICA), Cognitive Systems, and Cognitive Modeling (ICCM). Among those groups, there is an emerging consensus on several paradigms:
- Integrated architectures of cognition. We need to study whole, working systems, both for the purpose of comparison between approaches, but mainly, because cognition is not the product of the activity of individual modular functions, but of the interaction between them.
- Universal representations. Representations must provide both distributed and localist aspects, to enable neural learning, information retrieval via spreading activation, as well as symbolic processing (language and planning).
- Perceptual grounding. Representations should be grounded in an environmental interaction context, using a bottom-up/top-down perception paradigm, to allow for
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